packed with video cameras and monitors and the entrance features a brightly-lit sign: "Upon entering these premises your name, image, voice, and likeness may be broadcast live over the Internet." Customers must agree to give up their rights to privacy while in the bar. Inside, customers use remote control video cameras and monitors to spy on other customers, whether they're aware of it or not. When customers think about being watched by others, "they're taken aback by the lack of privacy," says co-owner Keven Centanni. But when they themselves watch other customers, "they feel empowered." Clearly, for customers at the Remote Lounge, being watched has its discomforts, its reassurances, even its thrills-just as it does in the real world, where surveillance surrounds us all